Twisted Logic Tour
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The Twisted Logic Tour was the third concert tour undertaken by British rock band Coldplay. It was launched in support of their third studio album, X&Y (2005), on 15 June 2005 in Hamburg.[1] Before the concert run, they embarked on a series of warm-up shows, which included their first performance at Coachella and an appearance at HFStival.[2]
After the Asian leg, the band decided to rest for an extended period to record Viva la Vida or Death and All His Friends (2008), wrapping the tour with a Latin American run in 2007.[3] It was Coldplay's only tour to not be named after an album; the group chose a song which they never performed live. The tour grossed $105.8 million from 2.05 million tickets sold in 132 reported dates.[4]
Background
The Twisted Logic Tour is noted for its use of extravagant stage effects. Strobe lights and various other fixtures were used to create an elaborate light show. The back of the stage contained a two-story panoramic video panel that displayed live footage and computer generated images, from video of a bear wandering aimlessly during "Talk"[5] to a montage of coloured blocks from the cover of X&Y during the song "Clocks".
Other concert highlights include:
- A digital countdown display shown on the panoramic video screen during the song "Square One" as the band enter the stage. The timer reaches zero at the song's explosive first chorus, followed by the crowd getting showered by red, green, and blue strobe lighting.[6]
- Chris Martin changing a lyric section of "Politik" into something related to the venue or a recent news event. For example, during their 2006 Toronto concert, Chris Martin changed the lyrics to "It's Thursday, March the 23rd, 2006, thank you for giving us your evening, and thanks for coming and being in our film". This line was made in reference to the fact that the concert was later featured in a made for television film.[7] This was also done with the song "God Put a Smile Upon Your Face" in some shows.
- Confetti, and yellow balloons filled with gold glitter showered on the audience during the song "Yellow" (a homage to The Flaming Lips).[6]
- During Coachella 2005 Martin sang the outro to "The Scientist" backwards, reminiscent of the song's music video.[8] During much of the tour, the entire track was played backwards live, after the band had finished playing it regularly. The Charles and Ray Eames video "Powers of Ten" played in the background.
- Martin running into the crowd during "In My Place" to sing with the audience.[9]
- Band members taking photographs before and during the show with disposable cameras before throwing them into the crowd. This was bassist Guy Berryman's idea, and was usually done during the reverse playing of "The Scientist".
- The band taking to the edge of the stage and performing an acoustic set of 2-3 of the following songs: "Til Kingdom Come", "Don't Panic", "Green Eyes", "Trouble" and/or a cover of Johnny Cash's "Ring of Fire" or Bob Dylan's "Simple Twist of Fate".
- Martin sometimes encouraging the audience to let their camera flashes off simultaneously as the band picks up during the bridge of "Talk", but also done during "Low" via a message on the main screen behind the band, resulting in a dramatic explosion of light. "Talk" also featured Martin taking an audience member's mobile phone and singing to the person on the other end, which was a common occurrence.
- Martin swinging a suspended lightbulb above his head after the second chorus of "Fix You", followed, in outdoor shows, by fireworks as the drum fill begins. This would later be featured in the song's music video.
- A laser light show during "Clocks", with red lasers shooting out in different directions.[10] These were reintroduced during the second North American leg of the tour.
- A handwritten list of songs being projected toward the stage during "Swallowed in the Sea".[6] This is presumably an early tracklist of songs during production of X&Y.
- The band gradually increasing the tempo of "Clocks" at the end of its regular performance, until it abruptly concludes at a ridiculously high tempo.
- During the Australian leg of the tour, the band made several references to the Socceroos in the 2006 FIFA World Cup by altering lyrics of the songs. On the second night of the Melbourne concerts and the final night of the Sydney concerts, the group performed the Kylie Minogue hit "Can't Get You Out of My Head" as a tribute to Australia and its music industry.
- At some concerts in Germany, Chris Martin asked the audience in German "Wo geht es zum Bahnhof?" ("How do you get to the train station?"). This may be a reference to the U2 song "Zoo Station".
- During performances of "White Shadows", thermal black and white imagery of the band performing appeared on the panoramic big screen.[11] This was done in homage of the song title, as these kind of images can produce "white shadows" of heat producing sources.
During the tour, the band wore matching outfits consisting of black jackets, black trousers, and white shoes; of this, Chris Martin said: "There's great security in looking over at Jonny and seeing he's wearing the same coloured shoes as me. I suppose it's the same reason the army wears a uniform - so that you feel part of a clan. And when we're all dressed that way, I just feel very much like, it's OK, coz I'm part of this team."[12]
Opening acts
Most of the tour included at least one supporting act on each concert, with English singer Richard Ashcroft opening all the German,[13] Dutch,[14] and Italian performances of the first European leg.[15] He was accompanied by Kettcar,[13] Tomte,[13] and Vertigo in selected dates.[14] Morning Runner became the main guest in Ireland and the United Kingdom, while Interpol (22 and 27 June), Supergrass (28 June to 2 July), Elbow (4 July) and Doves (5 July) featured as additional supports.[16] The first North American leg had Black Mountain until 26 August, as Rilo Kiley took over the remaining dates.[17] For the second European run, Coldplay invited Goldfrapp (mainland) and Ashcroft (United Kingdom).[17] The latter returned in the final North American leg after Fiona Apple played from 25 January to 5 March 2006.[18] The rest of the tour saw the band visiting Asia, Oceania and Latin America: Youth Group opened in Australia,[19] while Saiko, Brian Storming, Papas da Língua, Volován supported in Chile, Argentina, Brazil and Mexico, respectively.[20]
Concert synopsis
The Twisted Logic Tour's set list was heavily weighted towards tracks from X&Y since the tour promoted the album. The remaining material was mostly from A Rush of Blood to the Head with songs such as "Politik", "In My Place", "Clocks", and "The Scientist", and to a lesser extent "Don't Panic", "Yellow", and "Trouble" being the only holdovers from Parachutes played with regularity. The only new song played on the tour was "How You See the World No. 2" which was from the "Help: A Day in the Life" benefit album. Earlier tours such as those in the Parachutes era debuted work-in-progress versions of tracks that would appear on A Rush of Blood to the Head. Likewise, Coldplay's newest compositions during the A Rush of Blood to the Head Tour such as "Gravity", and "Proof" were included as B-sides to X&YTemplate:'s singles.
The introductory music played at the start of each concert was either Brand Nubian's "Meaning of the 5%" or "Tomorrow Never Knows" by The Beatles. The closing music is "Good Night" by The Beatles. The following is a sample setlist of a concert at the Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Bonner Springs, Kansas, United States. The major changes to this set for the other tour dates mainly saw "X&Y" and "Low" performed in lieu of "What If". Often, variations of these songs being played with one another occurred, such as "What If" and "Low". Also, "Parachutes" was often performed between "Yellow" and "Speed of Sound", and "Green Eyes" was sometimes added to the B-stage set.
Reception
The tour grossed an average of $801,780 from 15,599 tickets sold each night, leading to $105,834,960 grossed from 2,059,068 admissions in 132 dates.[4] Coldplay moved 608,441 entries with the 2005 shows, securing the eleventh-most-attended run of the year.[21] They also received a nomination for Major Tour of the Year at the 2006 Pollstar Awards,[22] while PRG was shortlisted for Lighting Company of the Year at the 6th Parnelli Awards after working with the band.[23]
Video release
A concert film was shot at the Air Canada Centre in Toronto on 22 and 23 March 2006.[6] The band announced its DVD release in March but it was only shown in television channels like Canada's Much Music, under the name Coldplay: How We Saw the World – Live in Toronto.[24] The airing date was 14 December 2006 at 9 pm and replays occurred at midnight and 3:30 pm on 15 December. Due to the lack of airplay on mainstream channels, the show has been heavily shared illegally on the internet.
Set list
This set list was taken from the 23 March 2006 concert in Toronto, Canada. It does not represent all shows throughout the tour.[25]
Template:Div col Main stage
- "Square One"
- "Politik"
- "Yellow"
- "Speed of Sound"
- "God Put a Smile upon Your Face"
- "What If"
- "How You See the World No. 2"
- "Don't Panic"
- "White Shadows"
- "The Scientist"
B-stage
- "Til Kingdom Come"
- "Ring of Fire" (Johnny Cash cover)Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- "Trouble"
Main stage
Encore
- "Swallowed in the Sea"
- "In My Place"
- "Fix You"
Tour dates
| Date (2007) | City | Country | Venue |
|---|---|---|---|
| 14 February | Santiago | Chile | Espacio Riesco |
| 15 February | |||
| 16 February | |||
| 20 February | Buenos Aires | Argentina | Teatro Gran Rex |
| 21 February | |||
| 22 February | |||
| 26 February | São Paulo | Brazil | Via Funchal |
| 27 February | |||
| 28 February | |||
| 3 March | Mexico City | Mexico | Auditorio Nacional |
| 4 March |
Cancelled shows
| Date (2005) | City | Country | Venue | Reason | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 16 September | PelhamTemplate:Efn-lr | United States | Verizon Wireless Music Center | Illness | [27] |
| 24 September | The WoodlandsTemplate:Efn-lr | Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion | Hurricane Rita | [28] |
Boxscores
| City | Venue | Attendance | Revenue |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toronto | Air Canada Centre | 16,066 / 16,066 | $879,676 |
| Montreal | Bell Centre | 15,703 / 16,000 | $848,423 |
| Hartford | New England Dodge Music Center | 22,909 / 22,909 | $793,901 |
| Mansfield | Tweeter Center for the Performing Arts | 19,923 / 19,923 | $914,602 |
| Camden | Tweeter Center at the Waterfront | 25,331 / 25,331 | $1,060,869 |
| Cincinnati | Riverbend Music Center | 16,212 / 16,212 | $588,496 |
| Burgettstown | Post-Gazette Pavilion | 14,865 / 23,102 | $439,771 |
| Noblesville | Verizon Wireless Music Center | 17,954 / 24,712 | $702,970 |
| East Troy | Alpine Valley Music Theatre | 32,591 / 35,510 | $1,216,509 |
| Auburn | White River Amphitheatre | 16,588 / 19,536 | $674,116 |
| Ridgefield | Template:Sort | 11,128 / 17,620 | $525,255 |
| Mountain View | Shoreline Amphitheatre | 22,000 / 22,000 | $810,600 |
| Irvine | Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre | 30,443 / 32,172 | $1,518,283 |
| Albuquerque | Journal Pavilion | 8,383 / 12,197 | $326,330 |
| Phoenix | Cricket Pavilion | 15,416 / 20,061 | $654,764 |
| Chula Vista | Cricket Wireless Amphitheatre | 19,027 / 19,027 | $669,787 |
| Clarkston | DTE Energy Music Theatre | 15,509 / 15,509 | $691,400 |
| Columbus | Germain Amphitheater | 17,315 / 20,000 | $565,299 |
| Darien | Darien Lake Performing Arts Center | 15,048 / 21,700 | $602,871 |
| Holmdel | PNC Bank Arts Center | 16,944 / 16,944 | $696,859 |
| New York City | Madison Square Garden | 31,861 / 31,861Template:Efn | $1,767,792Template:Efn |
| Charlotte | Verizon Wireless Amphitheatre | 18,787 / 18,787 | $652,021 |
| Raleigh | Alltel Pavilion | 20,000 / 20,000 | $549,626 |
| West Palm Beach | Sound Advice Amphitheatre | 18,265 / 18,787 | $711,133 |
| Maryland Heights | UMB Bank Pavilion | 16,918 / 21,275 | $624,082 |
| Nashville | Starwood Amphitheatre | 16,601 / 17,160 | $559,431 |
| Minneapolis | Target Center | 12,732 / 12,732 | $590,333 |
| Bonner Springs | Verizon Wireless Amphitheater | 14,703 / 18,000 | $497,156 |
| Dallas | Smirnoff Music Center | 19,380 / 19,702 | $746,655 |
| Atlanta | Philips Arena | 14,557 / 14,557 | $752,540 |
| Virginia Beach | Verizon Wireless Amphitheater | 12,175 / 20,040 | $459,763 |
| Bristow | Nissan Pavilion | 22,552 / 23,029 | $973,524 |
| Manchester | Manchester Evening News Arena | 16,906 / 17,346 | $980,170 |
| Seattle | KeyArena | 13,050 / 13,050 | $810,486 |
| Vancouver | General Motors Place | 29,400 / 29,400Template:Efn | $1,940,954Template:Efn |
| Sacramento | ARCO Arena | 13,702 / 13,798 | $735,167 |
| Oakland | Oakland Arena | 13,727 / 13,727 | $965,316 |
| San Jose | HP Pavilion | 13,335 / 13,545 | $859,242 |
| Paradise | MGM Grand Garden Arena | 14,439 / 14,439 | $952,348 |
| Inglewood | Template:Sort | 15,222 / 15,387 | $1,062,356 |
| Anaheim | Arrowhead Pond of Anaheim | 27,261 / 27,808Template:Efn | $1,937,572Template:Efn |
| Denver | Pepsi Center | 14,798 / 14,798 | $928,584 |
| Omaha | Qwest Center Omaha | 14,787 / 14,787 | $840,113 |
| Auburn Hills | Template:Sort | 16,219 / 16,219 | $949,298 |
| Louisville | Freedom Hall | 13,253 / 13,253 | $652,966 |
| Houston | Toyota Center | 14,344 / 14,544 | $902,168 |
| Dallas | American Airlines Center | 14,729 / 15,663 | $1,038,928 |
| Oklahoma City | Ford Center | 13,818 / 13,818 | $774,125 |
| Washington, D.C. | MCI Center | 16,111 / 16,111 | $1,129,173 |
| Orlando | TD Waterhouse Centre | 13,312 / 13,895 | $847,397 |
| Tampa | Ford Amphitheatre | 18,706 / 18,706 | $779,971 |
| Ottawa | Scotiabank Place | 15,191 / 15,191 | $978,813 |
| Milwaukee | BMO Harris Bradley Center | 11,626 / 15,202 | $758,574 |
| Cleveland | Quicken Loans Arena | 13,503 / 16,724 | $693,641 |
| Toronto | Air Canada Centre | 34,834 / 34,834Template:Efn | $2,190,741Template:Efn |
| East Rutherford | Continental Airlines Arena | 17,934 / 17,934 | $1,175,643 |
| Uniondale | Nassau Coliseum | 26,531 / 27,266Template:Efn | $1,795,638Template:Efn |
| Chicago | United Center | 33,391 / 33,790Template:Efn | $2,329,361Template:Efn |
| Manchester | Verizon Wireless Arena | 10,003 / 10,003 | $731,231 |
| Uncasville | Mohegan Sun Arena | 5,993 / 5,993 | $359,580 |
| Philadelphia | Wachovia Center | 16,777 / 16,777 | $1,081,985 |
| Brisbane | Brisbane Entertainment Centre | 22,145 / 22,832 | $1,656,259 |
| Sydney | Sydney Entertainment Centre | 35,491 / 37,200Template:Efn | $2,587,470Template:Efn |
| Melbourne | Rod Laver Arena | 35,173 / 36,000Template:Efn | $2,594,453Template:Efn |
| Adelaide | Adelaide Entertainment Centre | 9,528 / 9,528 | $730,992 |
| Perth | Burswood Dome | 16,448 / 18,186 | $1,234,159 |
| Buenos Aires | Teatro Gran Rex | 9,039 / 9,039Template:Efn | $674,869Template:Efn |
| Mexico City | Auditorio Nacional | 19,276 / 19,276Template:Efn | $1,067,296Template:Efn |
| Total | 1,227,888 / 1,308,530 (93.8%) | $65,791,876 | |
Personnel
Credits adapted from the band's official tour book, which was sold exclusively on merchandise booths and their online store.[30]
Template:Div col Performing members
- Chris Martin – lead vocals, piano, keyboards, rhythm guitar
- Jonny Buckland – lead guitar, backing vocals, keyboards
- Guy Berryman – bass, backing vocals, keyboards, percussion
- Will Champion – drums, backing vocals, percussion
Main crew
- Dave Holmes – manager
- Estelle Wilkinson – manager
- Rina Silverman – Dave Holmes assistant
- Holly Tickett – Estelle Wilkinson assistant
- Andy Franks – tour manager
- Tom Golseth – tour accountant
- Vicki Taylor – band assistant
- Kelly Samuels – head of band security
- Geoff Sands – band security
- Dave White – venue security
- Dan Portanier – trainer
- Wayne Griggs – DJ
- Audrey Nugent – tour assistant
- Derek Fudge – production manager
- Steve Iredale – site coordinator
- Shari Weber – production assistant
- Dan Green – FoH engineer
- Bryan Leitch – show designer
- Nick Whitehouse – lighting director
- Alan Yates – video director
- Chris Wood – monitor engineer
- Eric Benbow – stage manager
- Craig Hope – backline technician
- Matt McGinn – backline technician
- Sean Buttery – drum technician
- Matt Miller – MIDI technician, tour documentor
- Tony Smith – CVE
- Rob Allan – FoH technician
- Stewart Kennett – monitor technician
- Tom James – drapage
- Arran Hopkins – LED technician
- Andy Bramley – vision mixer
Rigging
- Jim Allison (chief)
- Rueben Pinkney
Lighting
- Ben Holdsworth (chief)
- Tim Massey
- David Mathieson
- Iestyn Thomas
- Oli James
- Ivan Ellison
Camera
- Ruory MacPhee
- Mark Antoniuk
Sound technicians
- Nick David
- Rob Collett
Catering
- Heidi Varah – catering crew chief
- Ben Albertson – chef
Catering crew
- Pauline Austin
- Emma Jane MacDonald
- Dan Gamble
- Sharon Jackson
Merch
- Jeremy Joseph
- Dell Furano
- Rick Fish
- Don Hunt
- Pete Weber
- Eric Wagner
- Ken MacAlpine
Truck drivers
- John Burgess
- Matt Clark
- Paul Edwards
- Chris Helslop
- Tony Coolidge
- Dave Clark
- Richard Knock
- Mel Bonner
Bus drivers
- Tony Biddiscombe
- Paul Maynard
- Chris Cox
Van drivers
- Melanie Meglin
- Tanja Stuerglinger
- Harald Weber
- Vedran Banic
- Gunther Frank
- Ines Wauters
Suppliers
- Air Charters – aircraft charter
- Matt Snowball Music – anything at any time
- Stars and Cars – Europe artist transport
- Moorcrofts of London – UK artist transport
- Trathens Star-Riders – buses
- Eat to the Beat – catering
- EFM Management – freight forwarder
- Robertson Taylor – insurance brokers
- LaserGrafix – LED screens
- Siyan – lighting
- Music Bank – rehearsals
- Publicity & Display – passes
- Pyrovision – pyrotechnics
- Tour Tech – sound
- John Henry's – storage
- Celebrity Protection – tour security
- The Appointment Group – travel
- Fly by Night – trucks
- Picture Works – video
Photography
- Kevin Westenberg – principal band photography
- Penny Howle – live band photography
- Size Creative – image retouching
Website
- Debs Wild – website
- Anthony Cauchi – webmaster
Tour book
- Kate Stretton – designer
- Alan Hill – printing
Creative input
- Tim Crompton
- Phil Harvey
- Kate Weigert
- Jake Weigert
- Danny McNamara
- Al Martin
- a.b.a. Martin
Aircraft
- Lilp Rami – captain
- Pasi Koho – first officer
- Liisa Marsala – flight attendant
Others
- Karen Parker – Oxfam representative
- Phil Leech – GLD dressing room
- Steve Strange, Nicki Forestiero – X-Ray Touring
- Marty Diamond, Larry Webman – Little Big Man
- Lester Dales, Paul Makin – accounting
- Gavin Maude, Chris Organ – legal
- Shelley Lazaar, Sue Finn – ticketing
- Parlophone – record label
- Caroline Elleray, Ian Ramage – BMG Publishing
See also
Notes
Cities Template:Notelist-lr
Others Template:Notelist
References
External links
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